Conservatives best wake up

Avro

Time Out
Feb 12, 2007
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Two books suggest why Stephane Dion could be a serious threat in the next election

By LORRIE GOLDSTEIN

The more I learn about Stephane Dion, the more I think it would be dumb of the Conservatives to underestimate him.
I know, according to the punditocracy, the federal Liberal leader is a dud-man-walking.
But they also told us Stephen Harper was a dud and Paul Martin was dynamite.
Oops.
Two books suggest why Dion could be a serious threat in the next election.
The easier read is Linda Diebel's Stephane Dion, Against the Current, published earlier this year.
The tougher but more eye-opening one is 1999's Straight Talk -- a collection of Dion's speeches and writings when he was Canada's unity minister, following the near-disaster of the 1995 Quebec referendum.
Reading these pieces, you quickly discover that Dion is, like Harper, scary smart.
His speeches, letters and essays -- most given when he first entered Jean Chretien's cabinet on the advice of Chretien's wife, Aline -- literally demolish the separatists' arguments.
No wonder they hate him. He's smarter than they are.
Dion takes apart every myth they've ever propagated -- that Canada will have no choice but to accept a unilateral declaration of Quebec's independence following a referendum victory, that Quebec's borders are indivisible, that the international community will rush to recognize a self-proclaimed Quebec nation.
SEPARATISTS
Citing legal, constitutional and historical precedents, Dion almost mocks the separatists at times, challenging them to produce one argument that isn't naive, wrong or self-defeating.
Which brings us to Dion's role in the Clarity Act, fathered by Chretien, Dion, Harper and Preston Manning -- talk about strange bedfellows -- and in putting specific questions to the Supreme Court about Quebec's right to secede. Dion won a ruling from the top court that Canada cannot be compelled to negotiate separation unless Quebecers give a clear answer (well over 50%) to a clear referendum question, a much higher bar than the separatists have ever faced.
Of course it's not all brilliant. Dion proves even a smart political science professor can sometimes be brain-dead.
In a 1998 speech at Queen's University, for example, Dion observes: "It's all very well for the federal government to negotiate wonderful international agreements on the environment, but they'll get absolutely nowhere without the provinces' co-operation."
Exactly! So perhaps Dion could explain when, exactly, his party is going to figure that out with regard to the Kyoto accord and Alberta?
Similarly, in an 1997 letter to Bernard Landry, Dion chastises the Parti Quebecois for "your government's regrettable attitude of seeking to discredit your critics so as to avoid a debate of substance" on separation.
Right. And how would that be different from Dion's approach to debating global warming?
The most revealing anecdote, however, is in Diebel's book -- an interview with Stephane Dion's mother, Denyse, recalling the 1997 death of Stephane's father, Leon, a decade later.
Leon Dion, a respected political scientist in Quebec, died in a horrible drowning accident at home.
Recalling the tragedy, Denyse Dion describes with contempt articles in the media and separatist talk hinting her husband's death was the result of his shame and disappointment over his son becoming the chief Liberal federalist spokesman in Quebec. "There were people who said he drowned himself because his son went into politics," Denyse angrily notes, calling them "idiots."
MOST HATED MAN
Think about that. At that time Stephane Dion -- who had followed his father's footsteps into academia -- was a political neophyte, whom the separatists were calling the most hated man in Quebec.
He was being depicted as a rat. Then his father, whom he clearly loved, dies in a terrible accident and his critics imply his father committed suicide because of him?
Never mind that Leon Dion wasn't a separatist and was proud of his son. What a cheap shot.
Even a strong person might understandably have said, "who needs this?" and retreated from politics.
Dion stayed. And fought.
To any Conservative (or Liberal) who thinks this guy isn't tough enough to be prime minister, maybe you'd better think again.

http://www.torontosun.com/News/Columnists/Goldstein_Lorrie/2007/08/05/4395334-sun.html
 

#juan

Hall of Fame Member
Aug 30, 2005
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We tend to elect politicians for the wrong reasons. Dion might have trouble winning a majority but I think he is probably a good man.
 

Tonington

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 27, 2006
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The Conservatives ought to focus on the problems in their own house first. Using the RCMP to kick out journalists comes off as paranoid and to me shows a lack of trust by Harper in his own caucus.
 

Toro

Senate Member
May 24, 2005
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Florida, Hurricane Central
I don't mind Dion. I think he did a pretty good job as Intergovernmental Affairs minister. But simply because he was a good minister does not mean he'd be a good leader of the country.

Paul Martin was maybe the best Finance minister this country ever had, and he was a bust as PM.
 

Avro

Time Out
Feb 12, 2007
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Couldn't have said it better myself, Toro.

While Dion is as smart as they come his main problem is he isn't a political animal like Harper or Cretien.
 

#juan

Hall of Fame Member
Aug 30, 2005
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Couldn't have said it better myself, Toro.

While Dion is as smart as they come his main problem is he isn't a political animal like Harper or Cretien.

We want another political animal???
 

BitWhys

what green dots?
Apr 5, 2006
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Anybody else notice Harper looks particularly vulnerable without the opposition around to point a finger at?

I thought the Central Nova deal was ****ing brilliant.